THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS AGAINST THE HEATHEN. APPENDIX AND ELUCIDATIONS
APPENDIX(1)
We do not deny that all these things which have been brought forward by
you in opposition are contained in the writings of the annalists. For we have
ourselves also, according to the measure and capacity of our powers, read these
same things, and know that they have been alleged; but the whole discussion
hinges upon this: whether these are gods who you assert are furious when displeased,
and are soothed by games and sacrifices, or are something far different, and
should be separated from the notion even of this, and from its power.
For who, in the first place, thinks or believes that those are gods who
are lost in joyful pleasure at theatrical shows(2) and ballets, at horses running
to no purpose; who set out from heaven to behold silly and insipid acting, and
grieve that they are injured, and that the honours due to them are withheld if
the pantomimist halts for a little, or the player, being wearied, rests a
little; who declare that the dancer has displeased them if some guilty fellow
passes through the middle of the circus to suffer the penalty and punishment of his
deeds? All which things, if they be sifted thoroughly and without any
partiality, will be found to be alien not only to the gods, but to any man of
refinement, even if he has not been trained to the utmost gravity and self-control.(3)
For, in the first place, who is there who would suppose that those had
been, or believe that they are, gods, who have a nature which tends to mischief
and fury, and lay these(2) aside again, being moved by a cup of blood and
fumigation with incense; who spend days of festivity, and find the liveliest pleasure
in theatrical shows(3) and ballets; who set out from heaven to see geldings
running in vain, and without any reason, and rejoice that some of them pass the
rest, that others are passed,(4) rush on, leaning forward, and, with their heads
towards the ground, are overturned on their backs with the chariots to which
they are yoked, are dragged along crippled, and limp with broken legs; who
declare that the dancer has displeased them if some wicked fellow passes through the
middle of the circus to suffer the punishment and penalty of his deeds; who
grieve that they are injured, and that the honours due to them are withheld if the
pantomimist halts for a little, the player, being wearied, rests a little,
that puer matrimus happens to fall, stumbling through some(5) unsteadiness? Now,
if all these things are considered thoroughly and without any partiality, they
are found to be perfectly(6) alien not only to the character of the gods, but to
that of any man of common sense, even although he has not been trained to
zealous pursuit of truth by becoming acquainted with what is rational?
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Note 9, P. 459.)
This is a most extraordinary note. The author uses "so to say" (= "as it
were") merely to qualify the figure, which a pagan might think extravagant.
"This is, as it were, the door of life:" the expression qualifies the rhetoric, not
the Scripture, as such. On the contrary, I should adduce this very passage as
an instance of our author's familiarity alike with the spirit and the letter of
two most important texts of the Gospel, which he expounds and enforces with an
earnest intelligence, and with a spirit truly evangelical.
II. (Covered with garments, note 7, P. 469.)
A heathen might have retorted, had he known the Scriptures, by asking
about the "white robes" of angels, and the raiment of the risen Redeemer; e.g.,
Rev. i. 13. "Curious and unlearned questions" concerning these matters have been
stirred by a certain class of Christians. (See Stier(1) and Olshausen.(2)) But
let us not reason from things terrestrial as regards things celestial: our
coarse material fabrics are "shadows of the true." The robes of light are realities,
and are conformed to spiritual bodies, as even here a mist may envelop a tree.
Because of men's stupid and cam ally gross ideas, let it be said of "harps"
and "phials," and all like phraseology as to things heavenly, once for all, "it
cloth not yet appear" what it means; but they intimate realities unknown to
sense, and "full of glory."
III. (The eyes of Jupiter, p. 483.)
Arnobius with remorseless vigour smites Jove himself,--the Optimus Maximus
of polytheism,--and, as I have said, with the assurance of one who feels that
the Church's triumph over "lords many and gods many" is not far distant. The
scholar will recall the language of Terence,(1) where the youth, gazing on the
obscene picture of Jupiter and Danae, exclaims,--
"What! he who shakes high heaven with his thunder
Act thus, and I, a mannikin, not do the same?
Yes, do I, and right merrily, forsooth!"
On which the great African Father(2) remarks pithily, "Omnes enim cultores
talium deorum, mox ut eos libido perpulerit, magis intuentur quid Jupiter fecerit,
quam quid docuerit Plato, vel censuerit Cato." And here is not only the secret
of the impotence of heathen ethics, but the vindication of the Divine Wisdom
in sending the God-Man. Men will resemble that which they worship: law itself is
incapable of supplying a sufficient motive. Hence,(3) "what the law could not
do, in that it was weak, . . . God sending His own Son," etc. Thus "the
foolishness of God is wiser than men," and "the love of Christ constraineth us."
"Talk they of morals? O Thou bleeding Lamb
The grand morality is love of Thee."
The world may sneer at faith, but only they who believe can love; and who
ever loved Christ without copying into his life the Sermon an the Mount, and,
in some blest degree, the holy example of his Master?
IV. (For those freed from the bondage of the flesh, p. 488 and note
The early Christians prayed for the departed, that they might have their
consummation in body and spirit at the last day. Thus, these prayers for the
faithful dead supply the strongest argument against the purgatorial system, which
supposes the dead in Christ(1) not to be in repose at first, but(2) capable of
being delivered out of "purgatory" into heaven, sooner or later, by masses,
etc. Thus, their situation in the intermediate state is not that of Scripture
(Rev. xiv. 13), nor do they wait for glory, according to Scripture, until that day
(2 Tim. iv. 8). Archbishop Usher, therefore, bases a powerful argument against
the Romish dogma, on these primitive prayers for the departed. Compare vol.
iii. p. 706, and vol. v. p. 222, this series. He divides it into five heads, as
follows:(4)--
"(1) Of the persons for whom, after death, prayers were offered;
"(2) Of the primary intention of these prayers;
"(3) Of the place and condition of souls departed;
"(4) Of the opinion of Aerius, the heretic,touching these prayers; and"(5)
Of the profit, to the persons prayed for, of these prayers."
And his conclusion is, after a rich collation of testimonies, that "the
commemoration and prayers for the dead used by the ancient Church had not any
relation with purgatory, and therefore, whatsoever they were, Popish prayers we are
sure they were not."
V. (The pine . . . sanctuary of the Great Mother, p. 504.)
I RECALL with interest the pine-cone of Dante's comparison (Inferno, canto
xxxi. 59) as I saw it in the gardens of the Vatican. Valuable notes may be
found in Longfellow's translation, vol. i. p. 328. It is eleven feet high, and
once adorned the summit of Hadrian's mausoleum, so they say; but that was open,
and had no apex on which it could be placed. It is made of bronze, and, I think,
belonged to the mysteries satirized by our author. It is less pardonable to
find the vilest relics of mythology on the very doors of St. Peter's, where I have
seen them with astonishment. They were put there, according to M. Valery,(1)
under Paul V.; "and among the small mythological groups," he adds, "may be
distinguished Jupiter and Leda, the Rape of Ganymede, some nymphs and satyrs, with
other very singular devices for the entrance of the most imposing of Christian
temples." It is painful to think of it; but the heathenism to which the age of
Leo X. had reduced the court of Rome must be contrasted with the ideas of a
Clement, an Athenagoras, and even of an Arnobius, in order to give us a due sense
of the crisis which, after so many appeals for a reformation "in the head and
the members" of the Latin communion, brought on the irrepressible revolt of
Northern Europe against the papacy.
VI. (Sacrifices, p. 519.)
It must be felt that Arnobius here lays himself open to a severe retort.
The God of Christians is the author of sacrifice, and accepts the unspeakable
sufferings of the innocent Lamb for the sins of the whole world.
The answer, indeed, suggests itself, that the sacrifices of the heathen
had no apparent relation whatever to faith in this Atoning Lamb; none in the
mysterious will of God that this faith should be nurtured before the Advent by an
institution in which He had no pleasure, but which was profoundly harmonious
with human and the self-consciousness of human guilt.
Arnobius would have written better had he been a better-instructed
Christian. He demolishes pagan rites, but he should have called up the Gentile mind to
the truths covered under its corruptions and superstitions. On this subject
the reader will do well to consult the work of a modern Arnobius, the eccentric
Soame Jenyns, who called out such a controversy in the last century about the
truths and errors of his View Internal Evidence of the Christian Religion(2) to
which he had become a convert from previous scepticism. This essay attracted the
attention of the Count. (Joseph) de Maistre, who read it in the French
translations of MM. le Tourneur and de Feller both, reflected it in his Considerations
sur la France,(3) and reproduced some of its admirable thoughts in the Soirees
& St Petersbourg.(4) From these two striking writers, the one an Anglican and
the other a rabid Ultramontane, I must permit myself to condense an outline of
their views of sacrifice.
So long as we know nothing of the origin of evil, we are not competent
judges of what is or is not a suitabIe remedy. Nobody can assure us that the
sufferings of one may not be in some way necessary to the good of the many. A tax
may thins be laid upon innocence in behalf of the guilty, and a voluntary,
sacrifice may be accepted from the Innocent (the Holy One) for the payment of the
debts of others. In spite of something illogical which seems to cling to this
idea, the Get of its universal adoption in all ages among men must be accounted
for,--the fact that all nations have always accepted this principle of expiatory
sacrifice, innocent men and innocent beasts suffering for the unjust. Never
could this principle have been thus universalized by human wisdom, for it seems to
contradict reason; nor by human stupidity, for ignorance never could have
proposed such a paradox; nor could priestcraft and kingcraft have obtained for it,
among divers races and forms of society, with barbarians and philosophers,
freemen and slaves, alike, a common acceptance. It must therefore proceed(1) from a
natural instinct of humanity, or(2) from a divine revelation: both alike must
be recognised as the work of our Creator· Now, Christianity unveils the secret,
presenting the Son of God, made man, a voluntary sacrifice for the sins of the
whole world· If it be a mystery, still we do not wonder at the idea when we see
one man paying the debts of another, and so ransoming the debtor.(1)
Christianity states this as God's plan for the ransom of sinners· Such is the fact: as
to the why, it says nothing.(2) As to the philosophy of these mysteries, we
reason in vain; and, happily, the Gospel does not require us to reason· The Nicene
Creed formulates the truth: "For us men and for our salvation He came down,"
etc. But we are called to profess no more than "I believe; help Thou mine
unbelief."
De Maistre responds as follows: This dogma is universal, and as old as
creation; viz., the reversibility of the sufferings of innocence for the benefit
of the guilt. As to the fall of man, "earth felt the wound;"(3), the whole
creation groaneth and travaileth(4) in pain together." In this condition of things
the human heart and mind have universally acquiesced in the idea of
expiation.(5) . . . And as well the Gentile sacrifices (corrupted from Noah's pure
original) as those which were perpetuated in their purity by the Hebrews on one spot,
and looking to their only explanation in the coming of one Redeemer, bear
witness to the Wisdom which framed the human mind and adapted its ordinances thereto
with profound and divine comprehension of all human wants and all human
capabilities· When the infinite Victim exclaimed upon the cross, "It is finished," the
veil was rent, the grand secret was unfolded. For this event, God had prepared
all mankind by the system of sacrifice which, even in its corruption, had made
preparation for the true elucidation.
In a word, then, Arnobius should have said this, as the Church was always
saying it in the perpetual commemoration of Calvary, in her Holy Eucharist, and
in her annual Paschal celebration. It was all summed up by the prophet a
thousand years before "the Lamb of God" was slain· By the prophet, the Lamb Himself
expounds it all:(6)--
"Sacrifice and meat-offering Thou wouldest not, but mine cars hast Thou
opened: burnt-offerings and sacrifice for sin has Thou not required. Then said I,
Lo, I come: in the volume of the Book it is written of Me, that I should
fulfil Thy will, O my God. I am content to do it; yea, Thy law is within my heart."
The expiatory sacrifice, the voluntary Victim, the profound design of God
the Father, are all here. But the infinite value of the sacrifice was unfolded
when the Son of man was identified by the poor Gentile centurion: "Truly this
was the Son of God."